By Morgan Cormack

Published: Tuesday, 24 January 2023 at 12:00 am


With only two episodes left of Happy Valley, naturally, thoughts have turned to if there’s any possibility of any future instalments. But going into this third and final season, the sentiment was pretty final – there won’t be any more.

The creative team behind the hit series have insisted that there are no plans for a future revival and it’s a fact that fans just have to reckon with. After all, you can have too much of a good thing.

With a third season that has so far left viewers reeling and avidly piecing together their own fan theories, we can anticipate an ending that will not only be dramatic, but also “cathartic”, according to series creator Sally Wainwright.

But why exactly won’t there be any more of the beloved series? Read on to find out.

Why won’t there be season 4 of Happy Valley?

Creator Sally Wainwright and lead actor Sarah Lancashire have discussed the ending of Happy Valley at length, and agreed that the drama “would only return once more” seven years after the second season aired.

At a BFI screening to mark the premiere of season 3 last December, executive producer Will Johnston explained their collective thinking going into the third season. He said: “The two vital things are that Rhys [Connah, playing Ryan Cawood] is now at an age to make his own decisions about his life and the relationships in it, and [Lancashire’s character] Catherine’s on the brink of retirement, and those felt like such juicy things to explore.”

He also hinted that Happy Valley would deliver a definitive ending, saying: “It definitely isn’t coming back – and again this is [from] Sally and Sarah who completely and rightly feel that you can have too much of a good thing.”

He continued: “We’re really not doing any more. You’re a few weeks away from the ending but when you get to it, I really hope you’ll feel content that if that’s the last you ever see of the characters of Happy Valley, it was a big way to go out.”

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Sally Wainwright.
David M. Benett/Dave Benett/Getty Images

Although the series has been perfectly engineered by the creative team behind it, Johnston also revealed that Lancashire – who also serves as an executive producer on the new season – had “a very big voice” in deciding how her character’s story would conclude.

“A series like this returning, the actors are in conversation very early about their characters and the way that things move forward. It’s to be worked out together and Sally, as singular as she is as a writer and a director, is also a massive collaborator.”

As for Wainwright herself, she echoed the same sentiment while speaking to Radio Times magazine and stated that they made a “definite decision that this was going to be the final season”.

She said: “Just because it’s been successful, we weren’t going to let it drift on until it became a pale shadow of itself.”

But it doesn’t mean that there isn’t an explosive finale to look forward to. Wainwright spoke of the final episode of season 3 and said: “A narrative has gone across all three: in season 1, Catherine and Tommy came face to face outside Ryan’s school, and in season 2 they almost came face to face in the crematorium, at Tommy’s mum’s funeral.

“In season 3, there’s a very big face-to-face showdown. The kind of cathartic showdown that people have waited for. It’s pretty dramatic.”

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James Norton as Tommy Lee Royce in Happy Valley season 3.
BBC

Similarly, before the final season aired, James Norton (who plays Tommy Lee Royce) said: “I think the reason this series is particularly exciting is because everyone knows it’s the last and so everyone is going to be waiting for something to happen, and everyone is sort of predicting and guessing how Sally wants to end it.”

He continued: “I have been predicting for the last seven years how she is going to end it so it was really wonderful to read the script and hear her ideas – and they don’t disappoint.”

He added that the new season is “as big and bold as ever” and is a project he is “immensely proud” of. In his Big RT, though, he mentions the “pressure of expectation”, saying that the series “hit the bull’s-eye in the first and second season”.

“We’re all aware of the incredible love people have for it and we really have to deliver. But I’m pretty sure that, by the time you get to the finale, you’ll be reeling.”

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